The World Health Organisation is working to rename Monkeypox because of concerns about racism and stigma surrounding the virus, which continues to spread around the world.
WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the agency is working with partners and experts from around the world and vowed to announce a new name as soon as possible for the "monkeypox virus, its clades and the disease it causes".
More than 30 international scientists said last week that the name is discriminatory and stigmatising and should be changed to better fit with the WHO's policies on not naming viruses after animals or geographic locations.
"In the context of the current global outbreak, continued reference to, and nomenclature of this virus being African is not only inaccurate but is also discriminatory and stigmatising," the scientists' group said in a public letter.
WHO has announced it will convene an emergency committee of experts to determine if the expanding outbreak that has mysteriously spread outside Africa should be considered a global health emergency.
Ghebreyesus said yesterday he decided to convene the emergency committee on June 23 because the virus has shown "unusual" behaviour by spreading in countries well beyond parts of Africa where it is endemic.
"We believe that it needs also some coordinated response because of the geographic spread," he told reporters.
Declaring monkeypox to be an international health emergency would give it the same designation as the Covid-19 pandemic and mean that WHO considers the normally rare disease a continuing threat to countries globally.
The UK said Monday it had 470 cases of monkeypox across the country, mostly in gay or bisexual men. British scientists said last week they could not tell if the spread of the disease in the UK had peaked.
The meeting of outside experts could also help improve understanding and knowledge about the virus, Tedros said, as WHO released new guidelines about vaccinating against monkeypox.
Dr Ibrahima Soce Fall, WHO's emergencies director for Africa, said case counts were growing every day and health officials face "many gaps in terms of knowledge of the dynamics of the transmission" — both in Africa and beyond.
"With the advice from the emergency committee, we can be in a better position to control the situation. But it doesn't mean that we are going straight to a public health emergency of international concern," he said, referring to WHO's highest level of alert for viral outbreaks. "We don't want to wait until the situation is out of control to start calling the emergency committee."
The UN health agency does not recommend mass vaccination, but advises the "judicious" use of vaccines. It said controlling the disease relies primarily on measures like surveillance, tracking cases and isolating patients.
Last month, a leading adviser to WHO said the outbreak in Europe and beyond was likely spread by sex at two recent rave parties in Spain and Belgium.
Scientists warn that anyone, regardless of sexual orientation, is susceptible to catching monkeypox if they are in close, physical contact with an infected person or their clothing or bed sheets.
WHO has been working with partner countries to create a mechanism by which some vaccines for smallpox — a related disease — might be made available to countries that are affected, as research continues into their effectiveness against the new outbreak.
Tedros said more than 1600 cases and nearly 1500 suspected cases have been reported this year in 39 countries, including seven where monkeypox has been reported for years. A total of 72 deaths have been reported but none in the newly affected countries, which include Britain, Canada, Italy, Poland, Spain and the United States.
The ongoing outbreak of monkeypox in Europe and elsewhere marks the first time the disease has been known to spread among people who have no travel links to Africa.